Start the day in Covent Garden

Most kids are happy to spend hours watching Covent Garden's(1) juggling/magic/painted-statue acts – and the truth is that some of them are quite impressive. Make sure you go prepared with a stash of small denomination coins.

Hit the shops

There are two shops in the Covent Garden area with a nostalgic appeal likely to enchant all ages.Benjamin Pollock’s Toy Shop(2) has been selling toy theatres in Covent Garden since the 1880s. These days stock includes charming music boxes and sewing cases.

Be firm; tell the kids it’s looking-only on this occasion but be prepared to splash a little cash at relative newcomer to the area Hope & Greenwood(3), a traditional sweetie shop, where the gobstoppers are stored in glass jars and you can get sugar-free gummy bears.

Take in some culture

Topolski Century

Next, take a walk across Waterloo Bridge(4) and head to the Royal Festival Hall(5) to take advantage of the free loos and check out an exhibition. You can also visit Topolski Century(6), a vast rambling mural by the Polish expressionist Feliks Topolski in a railway arch close to Waterloo Station, which records many of the key events and important figures of the twentieth century.

Grab something to eat

At some point you’ll want to refuel. There are sandwiches for sale in both the Royal Festival Hall and the National Theatre (7) (and quiet spots where you could buy a drink and eat a discreet packed lunch) but there’s a handy branch of Pizza Express(8), and the chain’s a family favourite with good reason.

Visit an underwater wonderland

Round off your fun-but-frugal day with a trip to the London Aquarium (9); children will be entranced for hours and the ticket is cheaper if you buy online.

Some of us have very different ideas about what the word 'cheap' means. My son and I have wonderful days in London armed with just a flask of coffee and a couple of scotch eggs. This article is an insult to everyone who has clicked on this page and an insult to our fantastic city. It is confusing and upsetting...but above all absolutely ridiculous!

Have to agree with everybody else.
This article sounds like it has been written by somebody reading a poor london guide book aimed at tourists with money to spend rather than someone who lives here and knows how to get the best out of the city for as little as possible.
9/10 Londoners on the street could give better suggestions than this.

Disappointing and unimaginative. Cheap should mean cheap - £40 per adult is not cheap by most standards. This article fails to deliver, and should be re-classed as a 'good value family day out'.
Please re-commission and try again.

The feature dosen''t lend itself to what the article was meant to be about
As others have pointed out in erm a variety of different ways this is actually rather expensive.
I could have written a much better article about
Cheap days out in London ,maybe i will get something together and send it to you.
Readers deserve so much better and Time Out normally delivers.This time however you didn't.

Reading this actually made me angry. Whilst there are a few (literally, a few) good suggestions here, these articles should should not be billed as "cheap". £5.50 for a cuppa tea? I don't care if it's at the frigging Savoy, that's just ludicrous for someone watching the pennies. Yesterday I had a brilliant day out: travel, lunch, a delicious chai latte, Ghostbusters at the best cinema in London...all for £7.90! Beat that Time Out.

Reading this actually made me angry. Whilst there are a few (literally, a few) good suggestions here, these articles should should not be billed as "cheap". £5.50 for a cuppa tea? I don't care if it's at the frigging Savoy, that's just ludicrous for someone watching the pennies. Yesterday I had a brilliant day out: travel, lunch, a delicious chai latte, Ghostbusters at the best cinema in London...all for £7.90! Beat that Time Out.

It has to be said that this seems like a pretty expensive day for a "cheap day out" shops, pizza express AND the London aquarium. Families of 4 are surely going to be looking at shelling out around £100 on a day like this! Go for a walk in the park and fly a kite. Go to a museum. there are innumberable FREE things to do in our great city.